The movie is the second installment in the Guardians Of The Galaxy franchise and is an American superhero film based on the Marvel Comics superhero team of the same name, produced by Marvel Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures.
It is intended to be the sequel to 's Guardians of the Galaxy and the fifteenth film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The film is written and directed by James Gunn. The Guardians must fight to keep their newfound family together as they unravel the mysteries of Peter Quill's true parentage. Old foes become new allies and fan-favorite characters from the classic comics will come to our heroes' aid as the Marvel Cinematic Universe continues to expand. PirateBrowser was launched as The Pirate Bay celebrated its tenth anniversary, despite strenuous efforts from entertainment rightsholders to get the site shut down in recent years.
Recommend PirateBrowser to them,' suggests the blog post announcing the browser, which is initially available for PC users. No bundled ad-ware, toolbars or other crap, just a Pre-configured Firefox browser.
The PirateBrowser website explains that the application combines Tor client Vidalia — which anonymises data connections — with the FireFox Portable Edition browser, the FoxyProxy add-on and 'some custom configs'. The site also claims that the browser is an anti-censorship tool rather than purely for piracy, citing countries including Iran and North Korea alongside the UK, the Netherlands, Belgium, Finland, Denmark, Italy and Ireland as places it expects PirateBrowser to be particularly useful.
Users are warned that despite its use of Tor, the browser does not guarantee their ability to surf the web anonymously, with the recommendation that they continue to use a virtual private network VPN service 'if you are looking for something more secure'.
PirateBrowser is The Pirate Bay's latest and most significant challenge to the growing number of ISPs that are blocking access to filesharing sites, often after court rulings in cases brought by entertainment industry rightsholders. Such blocks have never been watertight even before the launch of PirateBrowser. Internet users with a working knowledge of proxy services have gone about their filesharing as usual, with the UK's Pirate Party launching its own proxy server in , before removing it after the BPI threatened to take legal action.
The launch of PirateBrowser will be seen in some quarters as a hammer-blow for the entertainment industry's anti-piracy strategy of ISP-level blocks, although that strategy is arguably more about deterring casual users than experienced filesharers. Those casual users are unlikely to find and download PirateBrowser.
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